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/ 30 January 2004

A good run for one’s money

Already a proven mega-seller, the RunX 160RX, with its funky name and racy looks, has its sights set on this year’s Car of the Year title. Following on its successful Conquest/ Tazz range with a car as sound and tough as its forebears will certainly see Toyota keeping its sales-nose in front of the competition.

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/ 30 January 2004

Dynamite comes in small packages

From the world’s biggest engine manufacturers — 15,5-million units annually — comes the Honda Jazz, a potent little 1,4-litre super-minivan/ hatch that, together with big brother Accord, has to carry the flag for an importer that has never won Car of the Year.

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/ 30 January 2004

A good honest car at a good honest price

Kia’s new Shuma 1,8 Sport isn’t the quickest car around, and it doesn’t have the solid feel of some of the more expensive cars on the overcrowded South African market, but it enjoys a huge advantage in the one area that affects most of us — price. The Shuma is the cheapest 1,8 litre family saloon available, writes Gavin Foster.

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/ 30 January 2004

SA petrol price to increase by 30 cents

The retail price of leaded 93 octane, unleaded 93 octane, unleaded 95, leaded 97 octane and unleaded petrol is to increase by 30 cents a litre on February 4, the Department of Mineral and Energy said on Friday. There will be a 22c/l increase in the wholesale price of sulphur diesel 0,3% and a 21c/l increase in sulphur diesel 0,05% on the same date.

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/ 30 January 2004

The seven-hour itch

The manner in which this newspaper wrote the news before it happened last week (“The day rape was raped”, or, as it turned out, “The day after rape might have been seduced”) had nothing on the frenzy of pre-emptive journalism in the press box at Newlands on Sunday night.

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/ 30 January 2004

Let’s dump the matric ritual

This is the seventh straight year that I have been in South Africa at matric time –either while students are frantically preparing for it as if their lives depended on the results, or while the results are being publicised, scrutinised and criticised in the press and other public forums with great drama. Both have become institutionalised cultural rituals that South Africa would best abandon.

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/ 30 January 2004

Talking peace, making war

After fighting the longest civil war in Africa, the Sudanese People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) is now fuming over the delay in negotiations aimed at ending the conflict.
Talks in the Kenyan town of Nairasha have been postponed until February 17 to allow Muslim negotiators such as Vice-President Ali Osman Mohamed Taha to attend the hajj.

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/ 30 January 2004

A little problem of ethnicity

For a meeting in which adversaries agreed on nothing more than to meet again, the talks between Burundian President Domitien Ndayizeye and the last rebel group under arms has been getting rave reviews. The warring Burundian forces have agreed to set aside differences and work at building trust.